Jump to content

Secret police

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Altenmann (talk | contribs) at 01:25, 27 October 2004. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

A secret police (sometimes political police) force is a police organization that operates in secret to enforce state security. This blanket term generally means keeping the government from being attacked from within (e.g. sabotage, revolution, etc). In countries where rule is by fiat the secret police are often used to do things that the rulers cannot be seen to do openly.

In some countries, such as police states, dictatorships and totalitarian states, the secret police often uses methods that would usually be considered illegal (violence, killings, blackmailing, intimidation, disappearances) to suppress sedition, dissent, or political opposition. This can also happen in states which describe themselves as "democratic". For example, the United Kingdom's treatment of the Irish before Ireland achieved independence and since has included shooting people down in the street and intimidatng people in the middle of the night, the United Stateses Guantanamo Bay facility abandoned many human rights (Including some guaranteed in the Constitution) until the Supreme Court ruled that the prisoners did have certain rights previously denied (habeas corpus, for one) and the French Secret Service's sinking of the Rainbow Warrior has been characterised as a unilateral act of state terrorism. There are, of course, different varieties of democracy and, in times of emergency or war, a democracy can grant its policing and security services extra powers. These emergency situations can be abused or even manufactured. According to The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich by William L. Shirer and other research and writings the Nazis in Germany of the 1930s manufactured an emergency by burning the Reichstag and then blaming it on the communists.

Which entities can be classed or characterised (in whole or part) as a secret police organisations is hotly disputed, with, for instance, one side including the CIA and MI5 under the heading of "secret police" as the other maintains that organisations that are essentially for foreign intelligence-gathering and monitoring are not thus "police" and should not be so called. Another controversy is over whether the FBI and United States Secret Service must be included because secret-police activities such as wiretaps and what they characterise as "home invasions" are sanctioned, while the other side of the argument equally fiercely defends these actions and will not hear of these agencies being labelled "secret police". (This is despite widespread documentation of civil-rights abuses committed by the FBI, most frequently during the Hoover era, and accusations that its COINTELPRO programme constituted a political police.) Common usage of the term tends to carry connotations of the use of violence, torture, murder, 'disappearances' and imprisonment without trial. However, this controversy begs the questions posed by (largely) minoritarian (and perhaps even "fringe" or "radical") individuals and groups about whether these methods have in fact been used. For instance, Human Rights Watch has alleged that the CIA has "disappeared" Al-Qaeda prisoners.

Fiction

The concept of secret police is also popular in fiction, usually portraying such an institution at its most extreme. Perhaps the most famous example is the Thought Police from George Orwell's famous novel Nineteen Eighty-four. In that world, the Thought Police used psychology and omnipresence of surveillance to find and eliminate members of society who have the mere thought of challenging ruling authority. Real secret police are not, of course, this powerful.

See also

Reference